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Title:Frome and Piddle and Poole Harbour and Purbeck : consultation draftAuthor: Environment Agency South West RegionDocument Type: MonographAnnotation: EA additional title info: draft November 1999Abstract:The publication of the Frome an Piddle and Poole Harbour an Purbeck LEAP Consultation Draft marks the start of a three-month period of formal consultation enabling external organisations and the general public to work with us in planning the future of the local environment. Your views will be considered in preparing the next phase, the LEAP Plan. At the end of the consultation period we will produce a Statement on Public Consultation which will summarise the views expressed during the consultation process. The area covered by this plan comprises the entire catchments of the River Frome, River Piddle, the Corfe River and the Sherford River, Poole Harbour and a number of small river catchments flowing into the sea on the Isle of Purbeck. The plan has a geographical area of some 880 km2. The Frome rises on the North Dorset Downs near Evershot, and flows south to be joined near Cattistock by the Wraxall Brook, and at Maiden Newton by the River Hooke. Two small streams, the Sydling Water and the Cerne, also join the Frome upstream of Dorchester. Below Dorchester, the Win, South Winterbourne and Tadnoll Brook enter from the south, while the Frome itself meanders in an easterly direction to Poole Harbour, entering at Swineham Point just south of where the Piddle enters the harbour. The Piddle rises at four major springs near Alton Pancras, initially flowing south before turning east at Puddletown towards Poole Harbour. The Devil's Brook and Cheselbourne Stream flow from the north and join the Piddle east of Puddletown. The Bere Stream flows south through Milborne St Andrew and Bere Regis to join the Piddle at Warren. Poole Harbour itself is centrally located on the south coast of England, and is one of the largest and shallowest natural harbours in the world. It has an area of approximately 38 km2 at high water spring tides despite land having been reclaimed on the northern shores in both historic and recent times. Within the harbour there are three main channel systems, the Wareham and North Channel, the South Deep and the Wych Channel.Publisher: Environment AgencyPublication Date: 1999Publication Place: Blandford ForumSubject Keywords:Consultation; Local action plans (EA); Catchment management; Environmental management; Water quality; River fisheries; Flood control; Water pollution; Waste management; Nature conservationGeographic Keywords:Frome; Frome and Piddle subcatchment; Dorset; Poole HarbourExtent: 73; + mapsPermalink:http://www.environmentdata.org/archive/ealit:827Total file downloads: 0